Fully silicided planar field effect transistors are formed by avoiding the conventional chemical-mechanical polishing step to expose the silicon gate by etching the sidewalls down to the silicon; depositing a sacrificial oxide layer thinner on the top of gate and sidewall of spacers, but thicker over the S/D areas, etching the oxide to expose the top of stacked gate while protecting the S/D; recessing the silicon; stripping the oxide; depositing metal and annealing to form silicide over the gate and S/D.
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1. A method of forming a silicided field effect transistor, comprising the steps of:
Providing a semiconductor wafer having a substrate and a device layer above the substrate;
Forming a gate dielectric layer;
Forming a gate layer on said gate dielectric layer;
Forming a stack height layer having different etch properties than said gate layer;
Patterning a gate stack including said gate layer and said stack height layer, stopping on said gate dielectric;
Forming sidewall spacers on said gate stack;
Implanting a source and drain adjacent to said sidewall spacers;
Depositing sacrificial oxide;
Removing sacrificial oxide to expose said stack height layer, except over S/D;
Etching said stack height layer selective to said gate layer, stopping on said gate layer and said sacrificial oxide;
Removing said sacrificial oxide over S/D;
Depositing a conformal layer of refractory metal;
Annealing to form silicides on exposed silicon in gate and S/D; and
Stripping surplus metal.
10. A method of forming an integrated circuit containing at least one silicided field effect transistor, comprising the steps of:
Providing a semiconductor wafer having a substrate and a device layer above the substrate;
Forming a gate dielectric layer;
Forming a gate layer on said gate dielectric layer;
Forming a separation layer having different etch properties than said gate layer forming a stack height layer;
Patterning forming a stack height layer a gate stack including said gate layer, said separation layer and said stack height layer, stopping on said gate dielectric;
Forming sidewall spacers on said gate stack;
Implanting a source and drain adjacent to said sidewall spacers;
Depositing sacrificial oxide;
Removing sacrificial oxide to expose said stack height layer, except over S/D;
Etching said stack height layer, stopping on said separation layer and said sacrificial oxide;
Removing said separation layer over said gate and oxide over S/D;
Depositing a conformal layer of refractory metal;
Annealing to form suicides on exposed silicon in gate and S/D;
Stripping surplus metal; and
Completing said circuit.
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The field of the invention is that of integrated circuit fabrication, in particular forming fully silicided field effect transistors without the use of CMP.
The field of integrated circuit fabrication has benefited greatly from the use of chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP), which has become part of the standard processing sequence.
The improved planarity provided by CMP has permitted the use of steppers with very high numerical apertures and with consequently very small depth of focus. In addition, the improved planarity has reduced defects caused by step height differences.
Quality standards have increased as time has passed and scratches and other defects caused by the CMP process have become a significant yield detractor.
One example is the variation in the height of the poly transistor gates, which cause variation in the quality of suicides formed on the gates and Vt scattering caused by the dopant snowplow effect.
In the course of a conventional process to fabricate a planar field effect transistor, the transistor structure of gate bracketed by sidewalls and embedded in the first level ILD is planarized with CMP to establish a plane at the level of the top of the gate so that the polysilicon gate can be silicided. Vertical conductors pass through this plane in order to establish contact between the electrodes of the transistors and higher level interconnect structures.
Grooves in the material that forms this plane can become filled with conductor material and establish short circuits.
The art could benefit from a method of forming a planar (silicided) field effect transistor that does not use CMP.
The invention relates to a method of forming a planar silicided field effect transistor that does not employ CMP.
A feature of the invention is the formation of an exposed silicon gate in the transistor without a CMP step.
Another feature of the invention is the recessing of the gate below the sidewalls for improved isolation.
Transistor 100, which may be a p-type (PFET) or n-type (NFET) device using appropriate doping, has the conventional elements of gate 25, gate dielectric 2, source/drain 23 and insulating sidewalls 5.
Substrate 6 may be silicon, Ge, SiGe or other semiconductor materials. Device layer 3 may be n-doped on p-doped and Si, Ge, SiGe, strained version of any of the foregoing, etc. Gate insulator 2 may be thermal oxide, oxynitride, high-k dielectrics, HfO2, etc.
Source/drain 23 and gate 25 are silicides such as CoSi2, NiSi, etc. Sidewalls 5 are nitride (Si3N4) or oxide (SiO2), silicon oxynitride or a combination thereof.
Those skilled in the art will readily be able to modify this list of materials to suit their needs.
Referring to
Optionally, a hardmask layer 8, such as nitride, may be deposited to improve the etch quality of the subsequent gate stack etch, as is known in the art.
In a conventional process, the first level dielectric is deposited and planarized to the top level of the gate stack to expose the poly for siliciding.
That plane will be penetrated in the final structure by the source and drain (S/D) contacts. Scratches caused by the CMP may cause shorts between the gate and S/D contacts, since there are possible paths along the planarized surface.
In contrast, the present invention exposes the poly on top of the gate stack by etching the sidewalls, depositing and stripping a non-conformal oxide that protects the S/D areas when the poly is exposed.
In addition, the extra height in the gate stack permits the recessing of the gate electrode contact so that there is no direct path along a surface between the gate and the S/D.
The result is a functioning transistor 100 having a fully silicided gate 25 over gate dielectric 2 and between silicided S/D 23 in device layer 3 above substrate 6. Aperture 7′ above gate 25 and isolated by sidewalls 5 is ready to receive a gate contact. S/D 23, isolated from the gate contact by sidewalls 25 is ready to receive source and drain contacts to connect this and other transistors to form an integrated circuit. For purposes of illustration, box 400 represents schematically the remainder of the integrated circuit that transistor 100 is a component of.
Conventional back end steps such as depositing inter-level dielectric (ILD), forming apertures though it to connect various transistors to make a circuit, etc. will be referred to as completing the circuit.
A second embodiment of the invention is shown beginning with
Optionally, a hardmask layer 8, such as nitride, may be deposited to improve the etch quality of the subsequent gate stack etch, as is known in the art.
Conventional back end steps such as depositing inter-level dielectric (ILD), forming apertures though it to connect various transistors to make a circuit, etc. will be referred to as completing the circuit.
The process sequence is:
The alternative embodiment process is:
While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced in various versions within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
Luo, Zhijiong, Zhu, Huilong, Fang, Sunfei
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